In 2004 a spectacular piece of art work possibly depicting a Mayan design appeared in Avebury . A design of this nature would of course arouse and influence the believer that Aliens or some other paranormal source were sending us a reminder to study the Mayan calendar. Well I have to admit it did influence me back then. At the time I wasn't serious about crop circles I would take a look at the image, appreciate it and move on but this one had convincing appeal and caught my eye. However I do wonder if I saw the first part of this crop circle would I have felt the same as I did back then - would it have been as convincing as the finished product ?. The image shown directly below has been kept away from many crop circle galleries for reasons which we are now fully aware of . At the time crop circle tourism was picking up pace - more and more people were visiting crop formations as the many artistic talents were swooping on Wiltshire and laying their art within the historic landscape which provided plenty of canvas to influence and create magic which gripped the world into a new religion and of course man found a way to capitalise out of something which of course was deemed illegal. So to mask the legality aspect of it all it was best to keep the wondering public in suspense and wonder and keep any doubting or questionable images out of sight so just to strengthen and add a bit of spice to the growing in interest phenomenon. The image directly shows the initial out line creation ( The Construction ). A construction of almost 6 tramlines would require a dedicated group of people with an artistic vision and ability. Due to its complexity a design of this nature could not be completed in one night ( especially during short summer nights ) - ( unless of course as Aliens travelled across so many galaxies that they were to tired to complete it in one night ! - apologise for being facetious ). Once the outline ( or the template ) was created then on the 2nd night the filling in with detail was completed - then its time to take the shots and release it to the world and then the hype begins. The rare image show below was taken as a screen capture from a conference presentation video by David Wilcock. ( hence the colour variation ). Freddy Silva had also documented the two stages of this crop circle on his website but it would appear that all history of it has now been removed .

An elaborate pattern in flattened crops in a Wiltshire field has sparked fresh debate over one of rural Britain's most perplexing mysteries - crop circles.The formation, thought to be as long as a football pitch, appeared in a field near Silbury Hill over two nights at the beginning of August.Some say the pattern is made by mysterious forces and features symbols from the ancient Mayan civilization which mark the beginning of a new world order. Others believe it is made by commercially-minded 'landscape artists'. The only 'new order', these skeptics say, will be from publishers wanting photographs of the design.So who is right? Is it possible that someone or thing is trying to communicate with us using imagery from a culture more than 1,000 years old. 'A new era' Or is this just the latest example of landscape art that will be displayed on the pages of books and glossy magazines? Francine Blake, a crop circle expert from Wiltshire, believes the crop formation indicates the world is going to change dramatically. "The Moon has a cycle around the Earth, the Earth has a cycle around the Sun, the Solar System has a cycle in the Milky Way," Ms Blake says. "That [the galaxy cycle] takes 26,000 years, and this particular calendar is coming to the end of that cycle. "That long cycle ends in 2012 - it's the end of a cycle, the end of a time. A new era is starting for the solar system." Ms Blake likens the changes ahead to that of the fall of some of the great empires. "Just like the era for the Romans stopped and something else started, we are going from era to era and this is the end of one of them," she said. Crop circles have become a common sight in Britain since the 1970s, when they began to appear in significant numbers in fields, mainly in the south of England. There is widespread debate over when the first crop circle appeared. Some experts say the first sighting was in Lyon in 815AD. Others refer to a 17th Century legend called the 'Mowing of the Devil', when a devilish entity visited a farmer's field and trampled down the crops in a circle. Modern day incidents range from simple circles of flattened crops, to intricate patterns and complex shapes, similar to the one at Silbury Hill Scientists have examined grain stalks and soil inside circles and found anomalies. For example, they say they have found more magnetic iron compounds in soil inside the circles than outside. But Ray Cox, chairman of the Center for Crop Circle Studies, says all but the most simple patterns are created by humans. "We started out studying the subject from a scientific angle - and there is still a mystery," he said. "We still don't know their origin. They go back in decades, centuries, but these have been simple round circles, maybe with a ring round them. "You didn't get the elaborate ones in years gone by. These have only happened since the 1980s." Mr Cox puts the Wiltshire design down to the work of crop circlers or landscape artists. And it appears it is not a case of just sneaking out into the local farmer's field armed with planks of wood, rope, and rollers to create this 'art'. Some crop circlers are far more sophisticated, and more commercially minded, even using computers to design their intricate patterns. Such is the excitement and enthusiasm for these swirls, whorls and Mayan features, that genuine crop circles often get overlooked, the chairman said. "You don't get many these days," Mr Cox said. "There is no point photographing these simple circles because the big and pretty patterns look better and are more saleable as posters, calendars, books and postcards." Mark Fussell, who runs the Crop Circle Connector website and makes DVDs of crop circles, believes whatever the cause, the designs should be appreciated as works of art. "There have been ones that are better - there was an 'alien disc' two years ago," he said. "There have always been really good ones each season. "These circles are much better than some of the junk in the Tate - some of the stuff they call 'art'." 'Unfair and irresponsible' Art or a mysterious forces? It seems after two decades of ever more sophisticated designs, the crop circle community remains divided over this rural 'phenomenon'. But throughout the debate, there is one point on which everyone agrees: these elaborate patterns can be a dramatic and fascinating addition to the natural landscape. Everyone, that is, except the farmers whose crops are crushed to make the circles. "Creating crop circles is akin to trampling over someone's back garden," a National Farmers' Union spokesperson said. "It is unfair and irresponsible. Crop circlers seem to forget that they are damaging someone else's property and there are financial implications."

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